What is the personality type of Checco Zalone (Luca Pasquale Medici)? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Checco Zalone (Luca Pasquale Medici) from Actors & Actresses Europe and what is the personality traits.
Checco Zalone (Luca Pasquale Medici) personality type is ENFP, and more precisely, an Extroverted Intuitive Feeling Perceiving. He is a highly creative, highly sensitive, and highly intuitive individual. His strong charisma and phenomenal communication skills also make him a very persuasive public speaker.
In the past, his unique communication skills have been used for good, but his recent actions have been questionable at best. In recent years, he has been involved in a series of scandals and events that have left a lasting impression on his reputation.
As a result of these incidents, he has been blacklisted from a number of businesses and industries. This has had a negative impact on his career as a professional speaker on a global level. As a result of the blacklisted status, he has been unable to book many speaking engagements as a public speaker.
However, the positive side of this situation is that he has been able to broaden his skill set as a public speaker. This has allowed him to develop his professional speaking career as a professional speaker on a global level.
His personal life has also seen some ups and downs over the past few years.
Checco Zalone (modeled on the Apulian insult "Che cozzalone!", lit. 'What a rough!'), art name of Luca Pasquale Medici (born 3 June 1977), is an Italian actor, musician, singer-songwriter, imitator, comedian and screenwriter. He co-wrote and starred in the three highest-grossing Italian films in Italy headed by Quo Vado?.
Born in Capurso, after being a regular in many editions of the Canale 5 variety show Zelig, he became famous in 2006 thanks to the song "Siamo una squadra fortissimi", celebrating the Italian team just before the 2006 FIFA World Cup.[1]
In 2009 he co-wrote and starred in Cado dalle nubi, co-written by Gennaro Nunziante, who also directed.
In 2011 he again co-wrote and starred in Che bella giornata also co-written and directed by Nunziante. It opened with a record Italian opening weekend of $9.4 million[2] and became the highest-grossing Italian film of all-time in Italy, grossing €43.4 million.